Cruise RPM setting
Thanks for all of your imputs.
I don't have a 1974 POH, but I do have one for the 1978. It list the
green arc as 2200 - 2700, so as long as I keep it in the green I
should be alright. I'll check the 1974 POH next time I use that
plane, but I would be surprised if it is different since they have the
same engine. I do keep an eye on the temp guage. The main plane that
I fly tends to run a little hot anyways so reducing the throttle helps
keep the temps where they need to be.
In response to Kontiki's suggestion on new and interesting place, I
need the X-C time as well, so yes, I try to pick x-c trips when I have
more than an hour or two planned. Last week I took a friend up so
that he could take pictures of some land. When he was finished I
asked if he needed to get back right away. Since he didn't, I
diverted to an airport 30 miles further south where we landed and
grabbed a coke. I only need another 2 hours to complete the X-C
requirement, which I should complete next week when I take another
friend out for dinner. However, my goal is to land at every public
airport in the state. So I will have more than the hours needed in
that catagory.
John
On Oct 14, 8:08 am, The Visitor wrote:
I cannot speak about a 172 but if you are actually cruising in slow
flight, as opposed to flying slow, I hope you are considering your
cylinder head temperatures and oil temperature.
John
john wrote:
Shortly after getting my private license I went to a different FBO and
got checked out in their aircrafts - C172 and Piper Cherokee.
I talked with the CFI and asked what RPM settings he would recommend.
I'm renting dry, so one way to reduce cost is to slow down and thus
save fuel. At the present time I'm just building hours towards my
commercial ticket. Rarely am I in a hurry to get anywhere. He
mentioned that if I needed to get somewhere quickly, to keep it around
2400. If I'm just building time then to reduce to 2300. It will save
fuel as well as reduce the sound level.
The CFI no longer flies out of that airport, so I don't have contact
with him. I'm interested in others opinions related to rpm settings.
Is there any harm to the engine with reducing the RPM even lower, say
2200 or even 2100 RPM. I will confess to bringing it back to as low
as 1800 for a short X-C and found it to be good slow flight practice.,
which gave my one leg a work out in order to keep the bubble in the
middle. I wouldn't want to make many flights at 1800 though.
In the 172 I have reduced fuel from over 7.5 gph at 2400rpm to about
5.5 gph at 2200-2300.
Thanks,
John- Hide quoted text -
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